Kreshna Aryaguna Nurzaman wrote:
What, are you kidding? List them here, better with photos!
Alas I don't have my own (digital) camera - I've borrowed one from time to time over the years, and I have some pictures as a result (with wildly variable quality as well). Part of the reason I'm remiss to "list them here" is that I currently own better than a dozen pairs of headphones, and have gone through probably a hundred over the last few years - 😅. I used to have a large-ish number of receivers, player machines, etc - but I've been working on clearing a lot of that out (when it started taking up its own room, I decided enough was enough). Went through and put together some of the pictures I've got of various equipment I have, or have had. 😀
Some various pictures of headphones I have, or have had, over the years:



Key to models shown in the pictures:
- First picture, Denon AH-D2000
- Second picture, left-to-right, AKG K701, Sony MDR-SA5000, Sennheiser HD 580 Precision
- Third picture, left-to-right, Kenwood KH-K1000, Koss ESP/950, Sony MDR-F1
Down below there's also a Koss ESP/10 that snuck into a shot.
There's quite a few not shown as well - ask and I may have one, or (more likely) have had one. 😵 (Off the top of my head, the only manufacturers I can say I haven't heard at least one model from are Victor (while the KH-K1000 technically count, I'm not sure of their relationship (if any) to the HP-DX line - they were/are an odd-duck in general), STAX, German-Maestro, Final, JDM Fostex, and as a genre magnetostatic headphones (I have never been interested in them)).
Moving away from headphones - some receivers/equipment I have decent shots of:


The box in the middle is a neat curiosity - it's an external CinemaDSP/Pro Logic processor/amplifier combo - it couples with a stereo receiver (like the one on the bottom) and provides surround sound functionality. It brings its own amplifiers for all the channels it adds as well (if I remember right its only around 20wpc though).

This is the same receiver as the previous picture but with different gears - the one on-top of it is a stand-alone digital audio processor, the goofy looking thing with meters is a Koss ESP/10 system (electrostatic headphones from the late 1970s - before they went bankrupt (the black Koss headphones up above are their current model)); also worth noting is the heatsink next to Chancellor Vallorum - that's off of a Xeon II, and it actually was serving a purpose there - the PSU in the audio processor got relatively warm, and the heatsink cooled it down.

Same table with a different receiver.
Notably I'm missing pictures of my two bigger Yamaha receivers; DSP-A3090 and RX-V995. The A3090 died over the summer and was recycled, but the V995 is still trucking last time I had it out and powered up. The VFD is getting dim as it gets on in years, but otherwise everything worked. Also missing pictures of my JVC CD players, but I have some old images from a magazine (or something):


They're from the same model series (JVC XL-Z; the top is 444, the bottom is 555), the bottom one is the "big brother" model. You may be wondering why it says "Best Album" too - it has a built-in memory and you can program in the name of your CDs (I think up to 32 CDs) and it will recall that when the disc is inserted. You can also program it to have specific playback macros tied to that, so for example if you have a CD that you really hated Track 2 on, you could program it to play 1, 3, etc when that disc was inserted. Unfortunately mine both suffer from read issues - the 555 finally had it (or I should say, I had finally had it with its issues) and was recycled with the 3090, the 444 I keep around for testing things (because it has a headphone output and line output). The 555 did have wooden panels on the sides - it was wider than a normal component as a result (the front panels with buttons and the CD tray were the same width between the two; the wood added another ~2" beyond that); they were some kind of black wood (honestly even in person you could hardly tell it was wood unless you went to take it apart).
Found the images for the SF-2 speakers:


These two look like they were facing pages in a book:



The final picture is my pair - the foam behind the grilles is in pretty bad shape (for a pair of speakers from 1977 they're in fantastic shape though), and there's some dings no the wood grilles - I haven't decided how I want to go about cleaning them up, but the best idea I've come up with thus far is to strip them down, remove all that foam, and then wrap speaker grille cloth around them to cover-up the damage to the wood but to retain the wood (the images from Sansui seem to indicate the wood serves more than a cosmetic purpose; and it does also serve to protect the drivers inside). I've peeked inside before and all of the cones are in fine shape, which is pretty surprising (my Mach Twos were pretty bad-off and those are probably a decade newer). The pink thing is a blanket that normally stays over them to protect them when not in use.
I have never even seen the "big towers" that are supposed to sit up-front with the SF-2/SF-1 speakers; I think they're called something like X-9000 (and from the bits I've heard about them over the years, live up to that kind of name; the woofers are supposed to be >15" among other huge specs). I've tried the SF-2 out with my Yamaha EF towers (which are also 2x8" but have a separate mid-range and tweeter, while the Sansui has more of a full-range driver for that role) and it works pretty well, but you really get the feeling of how different the design philosophies are (the Yamaha are designed to be very direct). Technics Linear Phase speakers tend to fare a bit better, but are a little bit out-classed (at least the models I've had (L36 and L55)) in the low-end department.
Picture of the Yamaha speakers as well:

Normally they aren't setup like that - just got them together for a shot. That's left/right and matched center. Never bothered with the matching bookshelves as surrounds - but they look like if you cut the towers in half and just kept the mid-range and tweeter segment (I'm told by Yamaha that internally that's how the towers are constructed too (two separated chambers in one bigger box), but I haven't been curious enough to pull them apart and verify that claim).
In the picture I know the cones look like they're metallic (like some of the Klipsch and Technics speakers from over the years), but they aren't - it's just a weird reflection. They're a silvery/white and the manual says they're "poly-mica" - whatever that means. They feel kind of like marshmallows to the touch.
And some Technics LPs:

If you think they look rough in that picture, you should've seen them after I cut the cabinets in half! 😈
I found those at a thrift shop for $5 and snagged them - the crossovers were completely shot, as were the tweeters, so they were running with those big 10" woofers from wherever their bottom end is (something like 30Hz) up to something like 5kHz (they actually will play up that high); sounded tubby like you wouldn't believe. Cut the boxes down with the original intention of using them for open-baffle, but the particle board just splintered apart, so I dumped them into compost and build my own baffles (out of 3/4" MDF - which I would not do again if given the choice) for those woofers and a pair of JVC ceramic drivers that I pulled out of an honest-to-god ghetto blaster. I have pictures of those somewhere, but can't seem to find them right now. They sound infinitely better than either of the original setups, and for less than $10 in total hardware it was a fine way to kill an afternoon, but they're not going to replace a more conventional pair of speakers any time soon (and because of this, I've kind of stopped tinkering with them). The "final goal" will be to paint them metallic blue; it should contrast nicely with the white driver cones.
I don't have a picture of the L55s (those are still in one piece though - they work!); they're very similar looking to the L36, except they have a midrange (same veneer finishing and wave-guides for the tweeters and all that).
Will reply to your other points but right now I'm delirious with flue. Nonetheless I enjoy reading them.
Hopefully you feel better soon! 😀 Flu is no fun at all. 😢